water starting to come up. they are expecting a nine-foot tide here around noon. flood stage in this area is around seven feet. the roads right now look pretty good, very little rain, very little wind at the moment but they re expecting all of that to change. the big concern here is that tide and the storm surge. those two things together. the storm surge and that landfall for ian is meant to come around the same time as that tide. depending upon where it hits, that could really push a lot more water into charleston, charleston county. charleston is now at its highest level of alert. they are warning anyone at lower levels to watch what is going on, seek higher ground if necessary. they are already starting to shut down roads in charleston itself. so they are prepared for whatever ian has. it s just not clear how big a punch it s going to take here in south carolina. back to you. all you can do now is wait. mig ed marquez in charlton, we ll come back to you shortly. let go
leopard geko. she s had it for 25 years. the couches are turned upside down, the toilets are upside down. there is water leaking in our cabinets. everything is ruined. reporter: they d only been living here a year. it s just destroyed and you have to start all over again. and where do you start? how do you start in this? reporter: that s what a lot of people in that community and this community are wondering where do you start? how do they begin? when you look at something like this, see all the twisted metal from a home just wrapped around a tree and a light pole there, this entire community, 650 homes underwater and the water is not receding. there s fish that are about two feet big. where they came from, it s unclear. the boats have been tossed out of here and the fish were tossed
diagnosed with breast cancer, and now, her triumph. reporter: it was october 2013 when my world collapsed and my security shattered. now five years later, i ve asked family and friends to help celebrate my survival with something big, 19,341 feet big. africa s tallest peak, mt. kilimanjaro. it just made sense for me, because i had another mountain that i had to climb five years ago. i had to battle breast cancer. go through a year of hell, as so many women have had and then live with a lifetime of fear. fear of recurrence. fear of it coming back. and instead of living in fear, i decide to live defying fear. we ve got ten. who here is making it to the top? we are! half of the 35,000eople who attempt to summit kilimanjaro each year don t make it to the top. the number one reason? altitude sickness. all right, guys, we re at 9,000 feet. as we spend the next day
appear to be fairly large. the biggest estimated to be about 80 feet long, one-third of the length or width if you include the wing span of the airplane. in addition, there is another piece that is about 15 feet big. 18 ships, 29 aircraft and 6 helicopters are currently involved. it was described by some as having little objects around it, some say a bitรง of a debris field. just a few hours before that press conference, the australian maritime safety authority spoke about these grainy satellite images. joining us now from london with that part of our coverage is kitty logan. is there new information we ve learned from australian authorities since that unbelievable press conference, or actually messages from the floor of the parliament earlier today? the australian authorities identified those two objects on satellite images which were taken last sunday on the 16th of march, some days